The Google Effect: Facts at our Fingertips
*This essay is grounded in the inexorable movement toward universal access to computers and the internet in American public schools, though the author hopes for the completion of that process sooner rather than later.
At every juncture in history, new innovations have caused a rethinking and often a recasting of foundational ideas. In the realm of education, technology’s deeper impact remains underappreciated. While electronics, specifically computers and the Internet, have been steadily if stumblingly integrated into modern schooling, their fundamental implications continue to go ignored. Teaching has long revolved primarily around facts, and necessarily so – yet the new millennium heralds an age where facts are easily, instantly and constantly accessible. Put simply, Google renders obsolete a great deal of contemporary pedagogy.
The concept of a search engine – a world of knowledge at the click of a button – would have been utterly foreign to the designers of the American public school. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the halcyon years for the mass schooling movement, impersonal information was available solely from books. Thus, developing a paradigm around the fact-based knowledge made perfect sense, and indeed was the only reasonable conclusion. While this model is not entirely without merit, an evolution is long overdue.
A shift away from routinized learning requires profound changes in instruction and content. The popular Core Knowledge Curriculum is predicated on the notion that students need to leave each grade with certain information, whether it be about the circulatory system or ancient
Taking away the “drill-and-kill” portion of education opens the door to project-based learning, a method which nearly every study says is better at developing students’ abilities. By allowing students to do large, mostly self-directed projects that follow their interests, they will engage the conceptual material, encounter the key information (you cannot reckon with ancient
We have only begun to explore the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the Google effect: Within a decade, a Tablet PC should be as much standard issue as a four-function calculator, allowing students to quite literally have access to a thousand encyclopedias at their desk. Still, our curriculum, methodologies and assessments are formed around an early 20th century model where the only search engine was in the mind. Now that facts are at our fingertips, it’s time to truly start teaching for understanding.
-E.H.
It's difficult to see how one can relate knowledge to the real world without having it. Using knowledge in the real world (i.e., beyond school) requires a collection of knowledge. Sure, Google is great if you've got a specific topic on which you need to do research, but bits of knowledge—facts in context—need either to be in your brain or to have been in your brain enough that you're aware of their existence. After all, how can you Google something if you don't quite know what that something is?
Real critical thinking involves analyzing new experiences or knowledge in the light of what you already know. Nothing beats Google for digging up information given some keywords, but it can't make those keywords into a fresh thought, and it can't provide you with the spark of an idea that makes you say, for example, "Hey . . . what I'm reading on the opinion page of today's paper reminds me of reading The Prince a couple of years ago. I wonder if there's really a connection there." (I'm not picking on Google. No other technology can either.)
Computers and the Internet are great. I wouldn't want to live without them—but they're not a panacea. And of course students should do some projects, but not to the exclusion of learning and knowing things.
I'm very happy that my teachers made me memorize a bunch of "useless" facts, because it's surprising how often they come in handy.
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